Braided Bead and Hemp Bracelets

I have a quick and easy tutorial for you today that doesn’t take much in the way of supplies, making it perfect for camp crafts, girls’ nights, teens – well, it’s a project that’s pretty much suitable for everyone, LOL. And you can do it just about anywhere – I will show you!

If this looks familiar to you, it’s an inverted version of the Wish Bracelets I shared last spring. It just uses 2 rows of beads instead of one. It’s also quite a simple style, so I’m probably not the only one who ha a tutorial for them out there. But if you read here often, you KNOW how much I love making different styles of hemp bracelets!

What you will need:

Hemp or cotton twine

Size 6/0 seed beads

Scissors, a clipboard or other way to secure your bracelet while you work, and a ruler if estimating length isn’t one of your strong suits.

First, check your bead hole sizes against the end of your twine to make sure the bead will slide on easily. Then, cut off three strands of twine about 12 inches long. You will need enough extra length to be able to tie your bracelet on when it’s finished – like a friendship bracelet. Tie an overhand knot about 1-1/2 to 2 inches down, to create your “tails”.

Clip it onto your clipboard to secure it, unless you have another method you like to use. This works well for me, though.

Braid your bracelet about 2 inches. You can actually make this more or less, to add more or fewer beads as you like. No rules here, just do what you like!

Now, add a bead onto your outside strand. It doesn’t matter whether you are pulling from the left or right first, just whichever strand you’re about to pass to the middle. Slide it up snug with the knot, and continue your braid. This will add it to the outside of your braid.

Do the same thing on the next strand, and then the next – add a bead to the strand just before you pass it to the middle. Keep adding beads until you have enough to your liking. I like 2 rows of 7 – so, 14 beads total. (This is opposite of the Wish Bracelets – those, you add on so that the bead is placed inside the braid, rather than the outside, giving you only one row of beads.)

When you have enough to suit your tastes, it should be around 2-1/2 inches of beads, give or take, continue your braid normally (without adding beads). Braid another 2 inches – making your bracelet a total length between approximately 6 to 6-1/2 inches. This will fit an average sized wrist. You can vary it to be more or less, depending on whether your recipient is likely to be an adult or a child.

Once you are ready to finish it off, just ties another overhand knot. Cut your “tails” to even them up and match the other end – just make sure you’re leaving enough length that it can be tied onto a wrist.

Optionally – you may want your bracelet to be removable. If that’s the case, you can find glue-on jewelry end caps. Just trim the ends down to fit the cap, and use jewelry glue to adhere the cap. If you’re looking for another project to see how this would work, I recently posted a layered woven bracelet you can take a look at.

That’s it! A bracelet will take you about ten minutes – which makes it easy to whip up a few!

This is just the cheap stuff (that doesn’t say anything, including a size). I am guessing it is around 15 lb because I have both 10 lb and 20 lb and this seems to be somewhere between. But this just originally had a dollar store label on it.Adrianne recently posted..DIY Peppermint Vanilla Lip Balm

Hello, and welcome! I'm Adrianne, an artist, designer, and writer in western Michigan. I work from home with my husband and our kids.
I have a compulsion for daily creativity... sometimes it's baking, jewelry-making, paper crafting or giving new life to recycled and hardware store items. But with 2 young kids, time is short! My goal here at Happy Hour Projects is to share projects and tips that you can do in an hour or less. The ideas you find here are designed to save you time, save you money, and add a little creativity to your day, too!

happy hour in your inbox

Enter your email address:

Archives

copyright policy and terms of use

I love it when you love my work!
All tutorials and photos published at Happy Hour Projects are copyrighted. If you would like to feature my tutorial on your site, you may use one photo to feature, as long as you provide a link back to the original post and you notify me in the comments or in a direct email.

If you feature a photo, it may not be accompanied by the project tutorial or recipe, whether in my own words as it originally appears or paraphrased by you. This also includes personal sharing on social media and Pinterest. I do not permit photos of my family to be shared without my express written consent for each photo used. Publishing multiple photos from a project, or including instructions with an accompanying photo are not permitted and you will be asked to remove them.

I love to share my projects, and my tutorials and recipes are free for personal use. However, photos and ideas that are published to this site are my protected intellectual property. I am flattered to be featured, but only by publishers who adhere to my policies.